Alias the Bad Man (1931) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
4/10
Another Undercover Ranger
bkoganbing7 July 2010
In Alias: The Bad Man a really nasty villain played by Frank Mayo gets a range feud going between Ken Maynard's father and Virginia Brown Faire's daughter adjoining ranchowners. Each is having cattle rustled and each thinks the other might be responsible. But when Mayo shoots them both and makes it look like they shot it out with each other, that calls for intervention.

Which is what Maynard had planned in any event. Maynard is a Texas Ranger and he gets a summons from his father, but arrives too late to prevent his father's demise. So not being known in the area, Maynard pretends to be a wanted desperado to find out who's behind it all.

With Mayo's intentions on the girl as well as stealing cattle and Maynard getting interested as well, Mayo performs his villainy in the best Snidely Whiplash tradition.

Long time character actor Irving Bacon plays the sidekick role and Roscoe Ates must not have been available because he's supposed to be a stutterer. Irving is called 'Repeater' by his fellow Ranges including Maynard.

Nothing new here, but enjoyable enough for B western fans.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Just another typical Z western with your typical black and white characters.
mark.waltz5 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
At times, the photography in this low budget western looks ridiculously cartoonish with the camera speeding up to a ridiculously fast pacing during the action sequences. Ken Maynard has everything perfect for a low budget western hero: youth, good looks, charm and humor. Virginia Brown Faire is your typical western heroine, fragile and in need of protection, yet so white washed it's a miracle that her character name wasn't Sweet Polly Purebread. It's Al obvious from the beginning that Frank Mayo is the villain, simply because he wears a mustache and black clothing. It's obvious too that he sets it up to look as if Maynard and Faire's fathers killed each other so his cattle rustling racket will be blamed on them. Static, slow moving, with corny humor provided by the stuttering Irving Bacon, best known as the original postman constantly getting knocked down in the "Blondie" series. This easily could have been round up in under an hour, but it's been stretched out to 67 minutes, a reel too long for poverty row programmers like this.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
exciting, fun Tiffany western with Ken Maynard in his prime
django-117 March 2006
The 1930-33 westerns Ken Maynard made for Tiffany (in between stints with Universal) are a consistent lot, full of action and wit. Some incorporate off-the-wall comedy or horror elements (like Hoot Gibson, Maynard had a wild sense of humor!), but ALIAS THE BADMAN is a gritty, straightforward western with Ken as a ranger posing as an outlaw who is posing as a ranger! Ken has a politically incorrect stuttering sidekick named "Repeater" (Irving Bacon), and silent star Frank Mayo is impressive as the crooked town boss who turns the local ranchers against each other. Director Phil Rosen is better-known for his later mysteries and crime films, but he directed many westerns in the early sound period, and he handles the unique Maynard mix of comedy and action and mystery quite well. Maynard looks great here too, unlike in some of his later Columbia and Monogram films. An excellent entry in the Maynard series for Tiffany.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed